Yes, Donald Trump Can End The IRS Without Passing One Law!!!

4 months ago
19

https://irsmedic.com - For help with tax problems until the IRS is abolished!

Donald Trump wants to axe the federal income tax and replace it with massive tariffs—an “all-tariff policy.” Is this even doable? Does he need Congress to play ball, or can he pull it off solo with a loyal Treasury Secretary? Let’s break it down.
The IRS could be gutted without a single law changing. The U.S. tax code is a mess—it doesn’t even define “individual.” Is it a U.S. citizen? A kid? A foreigner? Nobody knows, because Congress never bothered to clarify. Instead, Treasury regulators decide who gets taxed. That’s the loophole: if the tax lives by regulation, it can die by regulation. Trump could appoint a Treasury Secretary to rewrite the rules—say, defining “individual” as “someone who consents to be taxed.” Boom, income tax gone.
Here’s how it’d work: under the Administrative Procedure Act, Treasury would propose the change, take public comments, and finalize it. Problem is, courts could strike it down if it guts the tax code too much. But Trump’s team could argue the vague law violates the 4th Amendment’s ban on unreasonable searches—think IRS snooping on your finances 24/7. By redefining “individual” to protect constitutional rights, Trump could force Congress to either fix the law or admit the tax code trumps the Constitution. That’s a political checkmate.
Tariffs? Even easier. Presidents already have authority to set rates under laws like the Tariff Act of 1930 and Trade Expansion Act of 1962. Congress handed over the keys; Trump just has to turn them.
Trump’s hinted on Joe Rogan that the income tax was forced on us by outsiders—not Americans. If he’s serious, he could treat the IRS like an enemy insurgency and wield his Commander-in-Chief powers to crush it. Far-fetched? Maybe. Possible? Absolutely.
Want to end the income tax tyranny? Share this, drop a comment, and follow for more. Anthony Parent from IRSMedic here—stick around for live Q&As where we tackle your toughest tax questions.
This version cuts the legal back-and-forth to focus on the core argument, amps up the anti-IRS tone for Rumble’s audience, and keeps the call-to-action punchy. It’s less about educating step-by-step and more about sparking interest and debate.

Loading 1 comment...